Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center receives a pledge of $10 million to bolster immunotherapy research

Gift fosters research that harnesses the immune system to fight cancer

SEATTLE — Nov. 23, 2009 — Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center has received a pledge of $10 million to advance the promising field of immunotherapy research to treat and cure cancer, even in late stages.

The donors, the Bezos family, are optimistic that their investment in immunotherapy — a direct outgrowth of the Hutchinson Center's Nobel Prize-winning work on bone marrow transplantation — will help change the face of cancer treatment.

"Our commitment to Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center is an educated bet on the next forefront in medical science and those who we feel are best positioned to capitalize on it," Jackie Bezos said.

The family's gift will help catalyze the Hutchinson Center's Program in Immunotherapy, a $28.5 million endeavor which, Center researchers believe, may open the door to the final stage in the war on cancer.

"We have been seeking significant private support to solidify the Hutchinson Center's position as the world leader in immunotherapy research. The Bezos family has stepped up to that challenge," said Lee Hartwell, Ph.D., Nobel laureate and president and director of the Hutchinson Center. "Thanks to the generosity of the Bezos family, we will be able to recruit and retain top immunotherapy researchers, create resources for the development of new immunological drugs and strengthen our clinical trials program to make these novel therapies more widely available to patients," he said.

During the next five years, the Hutchinson Center's goal is to advance and broaden the field of immunotherapy so that it has the same impact on solid-tumor cancers that bone-marrow transplantation - the first example of the power of the human immune system to cure cancer - has had on leukemia, boosting survival rates from nearly zero to upwards of 85 percent for certain forms of the disease.

The Bezos family chose to structure the gift as a challenge in the hope that it will unite others in the community to join the cause.

"We're very hopeful, yet mindful that undertakings of this nature are risky," Jackie said. "There will, inevitably, be setbacks. This is why we are structuring the grant as a challenge, to help the Hutchinson Center secure, for the long term, a diverse group of supporters and to rally a community around science that has the potential to benefit us all."

The gift is the family's largest private donation to support biomedical research.

"We chose to support the Hutchinson Center because it is a world leader in immunotherapy, which wields the power of the immune system to reprogram the body's army of infection-fighting T cells to be laser focused on fighting a particular illness. The first target — and it's a big one — is cancer. But the potential for using immunotherapy to treat other diseases, including those of the autoimmune system, are tremendous," Jackie said.

Already Hutchinson Center scientists have demonstrated the potential of immunotherapy to save lives. In June 2008 a research team led by Cassian Yee, M.D., of the Center's Clinical Research Division described the first successful use of a human patient's cloned infection-fighting T cells as the sole therapy to put advanced melanoma tumors into long-term remission. Yee and colleagues are now expanding clinical trials that use T-cell therapy to treat advanced tumors.

Because of the considerable resources required to develop these novel therapies and study them in humans for the first time, the Hutchinson Center's work so far has been limited to small pilot studies in a limited number of cancers.

"Our extraordinary success, coupled with new knowledge about how to improve and extend these results, has brought us to the threshold of a new era in the battle against cancer," said Fred Appelbaum, M.D., senior vice president and director of the Center's Clinical Research Division. "Now is the time to unleash the full potential of the immune-based approaches we have been so instrumental in discovering and developing, and the Bezos family gift will be instrumental in helping us realize this vision."

For more information about the Hutchinson Center's research focus in immunotherapy, please visit:

Note for media only: Broadcast-quality B-roll and sound bites of Cassian Yee, M.D., discussing the promise of immunotherapy research and the impact of the Bezos family gift are available upon request. The footage includes laboratory activity and exteriors of the Hutchinson Center campus. To obtain a copy (Beta SP), please contact Kristen Woodward in Hutchinson Center media relations, 206-667-5095 or kwoodwar@fhcrc.org.

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At Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, our interdisciplinary teams of world-renowned scientists and humanitarians work together to prevent, diagnose and treat cancer, HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Our researchers, including three Nobel laureates, bring a relentless pursuit and passion for health, knowledge and hope to their work and to the world. For more information, please visit fhcrc.org.